Removing Super Glue from back of neck?

So I got a Mighty Mite neck a while ago. I was pretty surprised by the very thin coat of satin oil poly on the maple. It's really just enough to seal it. I can tell by looking at it, that's it's pretty much a paper thin coat.

I spilled some super glue on the the back of the neck, and it's pretty ugly. It is not as clear as I thought it would be. Is there anyway to remove the glue without damaging the finish?

I highly doubt it, but thought maybe someone here could help. I have read to put acetone or Goof Off on a Q-Tip and be careful, and only apply it to the glue, but not sure if it could eat through and damage the finish.

Can You Strip a Hardwood Floor With Acetone?
By Chris Deziel, eHow Contributor

Floor installers in the past often used shellac or varnish as a finish. You can soften them by moistening them with a solvent like acetone, and strip them when they are soft, but doing so isn't the best way to do the job. Most contemporary floor installers use polyurethane instead of shellac. It hardens by curing and produces a much more durable coating, but because it cures, you can't soften it again by using acetone.

Shellac, Varnish and Polyurethane

Shellac is a natural polymer originally derived from a resin secreted by lac bugs and dissolved in a solvent. Some varnishes are similar, consisting of a natural resin, usually pine sap, in a solvent. You can soften either of these with acetone. Polyurethane, although sometimes called a varnish, is a synthetic plastic. Although it too is borne in a solvent, which can be similar to the type that carry shellac or can simply be water, it undergoes a complex chemical reaction with the air as the solvent evaporates -- a process called curing. The reaction is irreversible, and polyurethane doesn't become soft again.

Stripping a Floor With Acetone

Although you can strip a floor with acetone if it is finished with shellac or a similar material, like lacquer, most modern floor finishers don't use either of these materials as a final finish because they aren't hard enough. Acetone will soften some varnishes that were in common use before polyurethane became popular, making them marginally easier to scrape off, but the process is messy and time consuming. Even removing shellac or lacquer, which dissolve readily in acetone, is messy and labor intensive. It requires several applications of the solvent to do the job properly.